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The Malaysian Reserve on Feb 19,
2009
US, Middle East Investors Keen on
Distressed Assets
A Malaysian Shariah advisory body is
advising a number of fund managers
from the United States and the
Middle East who are keen on managing
distressed assets in a manner
compliant with Shariah — another new
innovation being injected into the
fast growing field of Islamic
finance. These funds managers,
believed to have an estimated
average fund size of US$500 million
(RM1.83 billion), are keen to pick
up distressed assets, following the
economic downturn, to form funds
that will be used to tap Islamic
investors. "We've been approached to
structure products to enable the
fund managers to launch their funds.
"They want to structure Islamic
funds for distressed assets," said
Amanie Business Solutions
Sdn
Bhd CEO Dr Mohd Daud Bakar.
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Managing
distressed assets via a mechanism in
line with Shariah law is one of the
latest developments in Islamic
finance. In recent years, Islamic
finance has caught the attention of
global investors and has expanded
into providing sophisticated
financial products like private
equity, project finance, origination
and issuance of sukuk, as well as
fund, asset and wealth management
products. "Due to the global crisis,
we now have many distressed assets.
Hence, this is a 'timely' product.
Its not a product of all seasons,"
said
Mohd Daud,
who also chairs the
Shariah
Advisory Council
of Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM). These
funds are new because of the time
frame, and the Islamic finance
fraternity has never had the chance
to manage distressed funds, Mohd
Daud said on the sidelines of the
one-day seminar."Potentials
and opportunties in Islamic asset
management post-2008 global
financial crisis", organised by
Amanie in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.
"The target market for the funds are
Shariah-compliant investors. Hence,
you have to ensure that the assets
that go into the fund are Shariah
compliant. We have to avoid hotels
and some warehouses," he said.
"We have to screen the assets for
them, put in the right structures
and help advise cash management of
the fund.
"The bottomline is, the money will
go into assets that are perceived to
be undervalued, in hopes that they
will go up in value," Mohd Daud
said.
He added that no local fund manager
has approached them for the Islamic
method to handle distressed assets.
"Once structured, I believe this
product can be applied in Malaysia
as well if investors are keen and
well versed with properties," he
said.
Fund managers are already on the
prowl for such assets. On Feb 17,
Reuters reported that US
private equity manager Lone Star
Funds, which forged deeper into
distressed real estate as the credit
crunch took hold in 2008, was
raising another US$20 billion for
troubled assets.
Half of the new cash will be
earmarked for commercial real
estate, including commercial
mortgage-backed securities while the
other portion will be invested in
financial institutions and other
distressed assets, including
residential mortgages and corporate
debt.
Yesterday, Amanie also launched its
stock screening solutions targeted
at the Islamic investment and
financial community. [Back] |